In short, such is the difference of character, of manners, of religion, of interest of the different colonies, that I think, if I am not wholly ignorant of the human mind, were they left to themselves, there would soon be a civil war from one end of the... Tijdschrift voor geschiedenis - Page 38publié par - 1924Affichage du livre entier - À propos de ce livre
| Andrew Burnaby - 1904 - 278 pages
...emulation to them all. Even the limits and boundaries of each colony are a constant source of litigation. In short, such is the difference of character, of manners, of religion, of interest, of the different colonies, that I think, if I am not wholly ignorant of the human mind, were they left... | |
| Andrew Burnaby - 1904 - 280 pages
...emulation to them all. Even the limits and boundaries of each colony are a constant source of litigation. In short, such is the difference of character, of manners, of religion, of interest, of the different colonies, that I think, if I am not wholly ignorant of the human mind, were they left... | |
| Rufus Rockwell Wilson - 1904 - 274 pages
...emulation to them al1. Even the limits and boundaries of each colony are a constant source of litigation. In short, such is the difference of character, of manners, of religion, of interest, of the different colonies, that I think, if I am not wholly ignorant of the human mind, were they left... | |
| Alfred Maurice Low - 1911 - 616 pages
...to them all. Even the limits and boundaries of each colony, are a constant source of litigation. — In short, such is the difference of character, of manners, of religion, of interest, of the different colonies, that I think, if I am not wholly ignorant of the human mind, were they left... | |
| James Alton James - 1914 - 606 pages
...to them all. Even the limits and boundaries of each colony, are a constant source of litigation. — In short, such is the difference of character, of manners, of religion, of interest, of the different colonies, that I think if I am not wholly ignorant of the human mind, were they left... | |
| David Saville Muzzey - 1915 - 634 pages
...emulation to them all. Even the limits and boundaries of each colony are a constant source of litigation. In short, such is the difference of character, of manners, of religion, of interest of the different colonies, that I think, if I am not wholly ignorant of the human mind, were they left... | |
| David Saville Muzzey - 1915 - 632 pages
...emulation to them all. Even the limits and boundaries of each colony are a constant source of litigation. In short, such is the difference of character, of manners, of religion, of interest of the different colonies, that I think, if I am not wholly ignorant of the human mind, were they left... | |
| Ramananda Chatterjee - 1917 - 514 pages
...emulation to them all. Even the limits and boundaries of each colony are a constant source of litigation. In short, such is the difference of character, of manners, of religion, of interest, of the different colors, that I think, if I am not wholly ignorant of the human mind, were they left... | |
| Jean Butenhoff Lee - 1994 - 428 pages
...diverse and fractious for all that, despite common membership and pride in a victorious British Empire. "Such is the difference of character, of manners, of religion, of interest, of the different colonies," wrote one traveler, that if they were "left to themselves, there would... | |
| Michele Gillespie, Catherine Clinton - 1998 - 212 pages
...of thirteen disparate and geographically dispersed colonies. As an English traveler noted in 1760, "Such is the difference of character, of manners, of religion, of interest, of the different colonies" that if "left to themselves, there would soon be a civil war from one end... | |
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